Étienne Pasquier, The Jesuits' catechism or their doctrine examined (1602) / translated by Patricia M. Ranum ; edited by Robert A. Maryks, Jotham Parsons.

"Étienne Pasquier (1529-1615) was a lawyer, royal official, man of letters, and historian. He represented the University of Paris in its 1565 suit to dislodge a Jesuit school from Paris. Despite royal support, the Jesuits remained in conflict with many institutions, which in 1595 expelled them...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pasquier, Etienne, 1529-1615 (Author)
Other Authors: Maryks, Robert A. (Editor), Parsons, Jotham (Editor), Ranum, Patricia M. (Translator)
Format: eBook
Language:English
French
Published: Leiden ; Boston : Brill, [2021]
Series:Jesuit studies (Leiden, Netherlands) ; v. 33.
Anti-Jesuit literature ; v. 1
Subjects:
Online Access:Click for online access
Uniform Title:Catéchisme des Jésuites.
Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Historical Introduction
  • Translator's Preface
  • Glossary of Terms
  • Étienne Pasquier: The Jesuits' Catechism or Their Doctrine Examined
  • Book I, Chapter 1 Wherein a Gentleman Opens His Country House to a Group of Weary Travelers
  • Chapter 2 The Plan of the Society of Jesus, Whom Ordinary Folks Call Jesuits
  • Chapter 3 Censure of the Jesuit Sect by the Faculty of Theology of Paris in 1554
  • Chapter 4 How, When, and by What Artifices, the Jesuits Wormed Their Way into France
  • Chapter 5 Decree of the Gallican Church against the Jesuits at the Colloquy Held at Poissy in 1561
  • Chapter 6 On the Request Presented to the Parlement by the Jesuits in 1564, to Matriculate at the University of Paris, and How Many Parties Butted Heads with Them
  • Chapter 7 How the Jesuits Were Refused at the Very Beginning in Rome, and the Artifice Thanks to Which They Were Received
  • Chapter 8 The Insolent Name of the Society of Jesus, Usurped by the Jesuits, and the Diverse Fashions They Expressed It, in Order to Get It Authorized
  • Chapter 9 The Jesuits Are Called Apostles in Portugal and in the Indies, and the Deceit They Used
  • Chapter 10 The Impieties of Guillaume Postel, Jesuit
  • Chapter 11 The Studies of the Great Ignatius
  • Chapter 12 When Ignatius and His Companions Presented Themselves before Pope Paul iii, They Were True Charlatans, and the Titles They Used Were False
  • Chapter 13 It Very Much Appears That the Approval Granted by Paul iii to the Jesuit Sect Is Null and Void
  • Chapter 14 First, the Management of Our Church by the Bishops
  • Second, the Ancient Religious Orders
  • Third, the Universities
  • And How the Jesuit Sect Is Built on the Ignorance of All This Antiquity
  • Chapter 15 One Cannot Give a Place to the Jesuits in All the Three Ancient Orders of Our Church, and That Is Why They Do Not Dare Attend Processions
  • Chapter 16 Without Wounding the Authority of the Holy See, One Can Truly Call the Jesuits Papelards, and Their Sect the Papelardie
  • Chapter 17 On Ignatius of Loyola's Fabulous Visions, and on the Miraculous Fables of Francisco Xavier
  • Chapter 18 On Ignatius's Machiavellisms, to Make His Sect Stylish
  • Chapter 19 Closing Book i
  • Book II, Chapter 1 Our Gallican Church and the Jesuit Sect Are Incompatible
  • Chapter 2 The Popes Who Authorized the Jesuits When They First Arrived, Never Believed That They Could or Should Reside in France
  • Chapter 3 The Jesuits' Teaching of Humane Letters, Philosophy, and Theology to All Sorts of Scholars Is Contrary to Their First Institute
  • and Concerning the Progress and the Surprises They Used to Promote This New Tyranny, to the Detriment of the Ancient Discipline of the Universities